
Backers say the technology is an efficient, climate-friendly transport option

When businessman and engineer Roger Miles pitched his idea for an underground delivery system to the UK government in 2003, he was told that it “doesn’t invest in crackpot ideas”.
The transport department felt that his plan to build a network of tunnels to transport parcels — an idea developed by the Victorians in London — was not an economically viable alternative to the trains and trucks that typically handle deliveries, according to Mr Miles.
But by 2050, the UN predicts that 68 per cent of the world’s population will live in urban areas. Such demographic changes will increase the need to figure out how to deliver goods to consumers in these congested, sprawling megacities efficiently and without harming the environment.
To answer this conundrum, governments and companies are taking underground delivery systems more seriously.
“If we’re going to solve the climate crisis, we’re going to need innovative solutions,” says Phill Davies, commercial director of Magway, a delivery company that is developing technology to transport parcels via a network of pipes. The system uses magnetic motors, powered by electricity, to shuttle pods filled with goods through pipes above and below ground that measure 90cm in diameter.


The company says it received £653,998 from the UK government in 2018 to build a prototype for a pipeline that could move goods from a warehouse in Milton Keynes, Hertfordshire, to a consolidation centre in Park Royal, west London.
Though Magway is currently focused on freight delivery, in future it hopes to install 850km of track in London’s decommissioned gas pipelines to deliver parcels to consumers in the city.
By 2050 the company estimates its technology could cut current carbon dioxide emissions from delivery vehicles by a third, while ensuring that 94 per cent of the city’s population can reach a station to collect their goods (known as “delivery nodes”) in less than 15 minutes on foot or by bicycle.
Some of the world’s biggest companies are also experimenting with technology to ferry goods through tunnels from warehouses on the edge of town direct to customers’ homes or nearby pick-up points.
In 2017, Amazon patented an underground delivery system that moves packages from regional depots to delivery nodes in city centres using conveyor belts and rail cars. The patent also states that containers could travel through a vacuum or a liquid or gas-filled pipe.
Alphabet subsidiary Sidewalk Labs says its planned underground delivery system, which would use “electric, self-driving delivery dollies [carts]” to link a logistics hub on the edge of town with the basements of residential and commercial buildings, could reduce truck traffic in Toronto’s Quayside neighbourhood by 72 per cent.
‘It is completely utopian to think your Amazon delivery will ever shoot out from your fireplace into your lap’ - Clemens Beckmann, DHL
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